Germany’s Euroskeptic Party Buoyed by Polls

9/6/2013 1:33PM

Support for Germany's euroskeptic Alternative for Deutschland is rising according to the latest polls. Christopher Lawton explains how the party could have an impact on Chancellor Angela Merkel's ruling coalition.

This transcript has been automatically generated and may not be 100% accurate.

... I ... the ECB chief Mario drug he was having a recovery in the euro zone and his monthly press conference ... a crowd of supporters of the Euroskeptic party Alternative for Germany ... gathered outside to hear its co-founder ... Conrad added ... they've done the European Union flags and science attacking the ECB for its role in keeping grease in the monetary bloc ... their enthusiasm for it by their highest rating yet in the pools of four percent ... just a tantalizing percentage point below the level which guarantees them parliamentary representation ... Linn doesn't govern Germany ... debates before YouGov in Germany ... stratum AFG co founder and spokesman told the crowd ... Mr. jargon as people decide how high inflation rises home low interest rates go ... and look left over for you and me ... since its founding this year if the party has injected controversy into what many predicted would be a run of the mill election ... by calling for Greece ... and other southern European countries in crisis ... to exit the euro currency bloc ... should it be into the government ... it could affect Germany's role as the euro zone seeks to exit the crisis by installing a voice in Parliament that does not oppose countries leaving the euro ... but supporters of German Chancellor and of the metal ... are more concerned that the AFP could up in the election but siphon votes away from her junior coalition party ... the free Democrats ... which the center right ... the AFP remains the only party in Germany to abdicate the exit of some euro zone members ... even if it wins only a fraction of the vote that could be enough to prevent the ruling coalition from forming a new government ... for The Wall Street Journal this is Christopher Lawton ...